The Ford Motor Co. is working on a hybrid version of America's iconic workhorse truck, the F-150 pickup. Will loyalists make the change?
The ECB forecasts the eurozone economy will grow just 1 percent in 2015, as opposed to the 1.6 percent it projected three months ago.
Dalian Wanda is looking to raise between $3.20 billion and $3.86 billion in the initial public offering Monday.
The Stalinist state denied that it carried out the hack, which revealed a trove of internal data, including salaries and social security numbers.
The five former Madoff employees, who were convicted in March, will be sentenced this week in separate legal hearings.
Striking workers in China, and those helping them, have often been harassed, detained and sometimes imprisoned by authorities in the country.
Police are searching for the driver, after a woman filed a complaint that he physically assaulted and raped her Friday night.
CBS and Dish Network agreed to restore service for subscribers ahead of headline weekend NCAA football and basketball action.
How well did the incomes of Hurricane Katrina victims fare years after the storm? A lot better than you'd think.
The deal would help expand its hold in the antibiotics sector and get access to Cubist's medicines, mostly used in hospitals.
The changes have been discussed for years but would come as thousands protest what they perceive as racial profiling and excessive use of force.
Dozens of lawsuits and class actions allege that the triggers have malfunctioned and caused several deaths.
The U.S. economy may have added the most jobs in nearly three years last month, but many still struggle.
The $55 billion wedding industry is waiting to see how millennials' marital habits affect business.
Only suckers pay full price -- here's how not to be one.
Shares of JPMorgan jumped more than 2 percent after CEO Jamie Dimon said his doctors found “no evidence of cancer” in his body.
Like a financial adviser, Santa considers fiscal irresponsibility a clear reason to be put on the naughty list.
Federal trade officials on Friday said imports of crude oil dropped 0.6 percent in October, helping to ease America's trade imbalance.
The Dow and S&P 500 broke record highs Friday, driven by the largest jobs gains the U.S. economy has seen in nearly 3 years.
Plaintiffs named in an antitrust lawsuit against Apple over its iPods may not actually qualify for the suit.
The gain is over the average 228,000 jobs added monthly since January, though the unemployment rate remained unchanged at 5.8 percent.
The rapid pace of job creation has slowed, but there's a bright spot. Starting salaries rose faster due to staff shortages in many sectors.
A U.S. court had found that Samsung infringed Apple patents and ordered it to pay the iPhone and iPad maker $930 million.
On Friday, India kicks off a fresh effort at selling the government's stakes in companies across sectors.
Citing disagreements with Facebook's Chris Hughes, Frank Foer has resigned from the storied liberal magazine.
Ford expands recall nationwide while Chrysler says it will replace passenger-side air bags in some regions. Confused?
A year after federal assistance cuts, nonprofit food pantries are under pressure as more Americans seek their help.
Florida-based NextEra says its strategy to build out solar and wind power across Hawaii could inspire other states to follow suit.
November's jobs data are expected to show continued hiring, but a slowdown that could raise wages is around the corner, economists say.
The Department of Defense is seeking help to bolster its technological capabilities.